| 11/06/2009 
While it is true that the juste retour mentality that has increasingly pervaded budget negotiations since the last major reform twenty years ago has many regrettable characteristics, it will never be easy to arrive at a package of EU spending that escapes this particular curse. The Iozzo, Micossi and Salvemini paper is, therefore, a welcome attempt to find a new approach. It is one of a number of recent contributions to the budget debate that has sought to distinguish more explicitly between the public good and distributive elements of the budget. In essence the proposal boils down to saying that the budget should be split, with public goods funded by authentic EU resources, while net transfers between Member States are financed by GNI-based contributions. It sounds alluring, but would have to confront a number of difficulties. Conceptually, to begin with, the first "chapter" of spending in the proposal is a form of equalisation in which the transfers are embedded in selected policies, rather than being pure cash transfers as found in some federal countries. Good examples of the latter are the finanzausgleich mechanisms in Austria and Germany...


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L'auteur
Iain Begg est Chargé de recherche profressorale à l'Insitut européen de la London School of Economics and Political Science.
En vue
Notre Europe | 16/06/2009
Alors que le processus de réexamen du budget communautaire touche à sa fin, Notre Europe invite quelques chercheurs et observateurs de premier plan à débattre de la proposition de réforme du budget de l'UE avancée par Alfonso Iozzo, Stefano Micossi et Maria Teresa Salvemini dans une note publiée par le CEPS (A New Budget for the European Union?, CEPS policy brief n ° 19, mai 2008).